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Autres articles (83)

  • Menus personnalisés

    14 novembre 2010, par

    MediaSPIP utilise le plugin Menus pour gérer plusieurs menus configurables pour la navigation.
    Cela permet de laisser aux administrateurs de canaux la possibilité de configurer finement ces menus.
    Menus créés à l’initialisation du site
    Par défaut trois menus sont créés automatiquement à l’initialisation du site : Le menu principal ; Identifiant : barrenav ; Ce menu s’insère en général en haut de la page après le bloc d’entête, son identifiant le rend compatible avec les squelettes basés sur Zpip ; (...)

  • Use, discuss, criticize

    13 avril 2011, par

    Talk to people directly involved in MediaSPIP’s development, or to people around you who could use MediaSPIP to share, enhance or develop their creative projects.
    The bigger the community, the more MediaSPIP’s potential will be explored and the faster the software will evolve.
    A discussion list is available for all exchanges between users.

  • MediaSPIP 0.1 Beta version

    25 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP 0.1 beta is the first version of MediaSPIP proclaimed as "usable".
    The zip file provided here only contains the sources of MediaSPIP in its standalone version.
    To get a working installation, you must manually install all-software dependencies on the server.
    If you want to use this archive for an installation in "farm mode", you will also need to proceed to other manual (...)

Sur d’autres sites (10217)

  • Extract individual frames from video and pipe them to StandardOutput in FFmpeg

    13 novembre 2019, par Nicke Manarin

    I’m trying to extract frames from a video using FFmpeg. But instead of letting FFmpeg write the files to disk, I’m trying to get the frames directly from StandardOutput.

    I’m not sure if it’s feasible. I’m expecting to get each frame individually as they get decoded by reading and waiting until all frames are extracted.

    With the current code, I think that I’m getting all frames at once.


    Command

    ffmpeg -i "C:\video.mp4" -r 30 -ss 00:00:10.000 -to 00:01:20.000 -hide_banner -c:v png -f image2pipe -

    Code

    var start = TimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(SelectionSlider.LowerValue);
    var end = TimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(SelectionSlider.UpperValue);

    var info = new ProcessStartInfo(UserSettings.All.FfmpegLocation)
    {
       Arguments = $" -i \"{VideoPath}\" -r {fps} -ss {start:hh\\:mm\\:ss\\.fff} " +
           "-to {end:hh\\:mm\\:ss\\.fff} -hide_banner -c:v png -f image2pipe -",
       CreateNoWindow = true,
       ErrorDialog = false,
       UseShellExecute = false,
       RedirectStandardError = true,
       RedirectStandardOutput = true
    };

    var process = new Process();
    process.StartInfo = info;
    process.Start();

    while (!process.StandardOutput.EndOfStream)
    {
       if (_cancelled)
       {
           process.Kill();
           return;
       }

       //This returns me the entire byte array, of all frames.
       var bytes = default(byte[]);
       using (var memstream = new MemoryStream())
       {
           process.StandardOutput.BaseStream.CopyTo(memstream);
           bytes = memstream.ToArray();
       }
    }

    I also tried to use process.BeginOutputReadLine() and wait for each frame in OutputDataReceived. But it returns parts of each frame, like the 10 first bytes, than other 50 bytes, it’s erratic.

    Is there any way to get the frames separately via the output stream ?

  • probing individual klv streams for specific signature/header

    17 juin 2019, par J Heyman

    Currently, the software I support processes the different streams within a video container (.ts, .mp4, .mpg, etc) without any issues as long as there is only one(1) type of each codec stream.

    I’ve recently encountered a video sample that actually contains three(3) identified AV_CODE_ID_SMPTE_KLV streams. As I loop through the three streams, one of them is the stream I need.
    I haven’t been able to figure out an easy way to do the specific query I need (check for known header bytes in the stream).

       ...
       for (i = 0; i < nb_streams; i++) {
          int real_stream_index = program ? program[i] : i;
          AVStream *st          = ic->streams[real_stream_index];
          AVCodecParameters *par = st->codecpar;
          if (par->codec_type != type)
             continue;
          if (id != AV_CODEC_ID_NONE) {
             if (par->codec_id != id)
                continue;
          }
          if (wanted_stream_nb >= 0 && real_stream_index != wanted_stream_nb)
             continue;
          if (type == AVMEDIA_TYPE_AUDIO && !(par->channels && par->sample_rate))
             continue;
          disposition = !(st->disposition & (AV_DISPOSITION_HEARING_IMPAIRED | AV_DISPOSITION_VISUAL_IMPAIRED));
          count = st->codec_info_nb_frames;
          bitrate = par->bit_rate;
          multiframe = FFMIN(5, count);
          if ((best_disposition >  disposition) ||
              (best_disposition == disposition && best_multiframe >  multiframe) ||
              (best_disposition == disposition && best_multiframe == multiframe && best_bitrate >  bitrate) ||
              (best_disposition == disposition && best_multiframe == multiframe && best_bitrate == bitrate && best_count >= count))
             continue;
          best_disposition = disposition;
          best_count   = count;
          best_bitrate = bitrate;
          best_multiframe = multiframe;
          ret          = real_stream_index;

    My thought was to add another || to the complex if{} above, but I haven’t been able to figure out how to do the comparison I need (looking for the header bytes).

    I’ve looked into existing documentation, and thought that accessing the probe_data structure within the AVStream contained within the AVFormatContext structure would give me the first few bytes of the stream. No such luck, as the probe_data structure is empty even though we’ve done a probe on the file itself.

    fprintf(stderr, "Filename: %s\t buf_size: %d\n", st-> probe_data.filename, st-> probe_data.buf_size);
  • Fuji .mov file converted by ffmpeg doesn't play in Windows Media Player [closed]

    30 août 2023, par glipster

    My Fuji X-T3 generates an FHD movie as a .mov with HEVC video and PPM audio. The new Media Player on Windows won't play this (without buying a codec) so I convert it to .mp4 using ffmpeg CLI (ffmpeg -i in.mov out.mp4). The resulting .mp4 file uses AVC video and AAC LC audio. This plays fine in VLC, but will not play in Windows Media Player nor Media Player. I've experimented with various options, but nothing seems to work.
For the original source .mov file, MediaInfo identifies 3 streams :
1stVid : English, 201Mb/s, 1920*1080 (16:9), at 29.970 FPS, HEVC (Main10@L5.2@High)
1stAud : english, 2304 kb/s, 48.0 hKz, 24 bits, 2 channels,PCM (Little/Signed)
1 : QuickTime TC

    


    The Output .mp4 file shows :
1stVid : English 3312kb/s, 1920*1080 (16:9) at 29.970 FPS, AVC (High 10@L4)(CABAC/4 RefFrames)
1stAud : English 132 kb/s, 48.0 kHz, 2 channels, AC LC
1 : QuickTime TC

    


    Using ffmpeg CLI, I tried changing the bitrates for the video and audio, I tried removing the timecode stream, tried a different AAC codec, tried moving the metadata to the front (-movflags faststart), also tried -strict experimental, tried first converting to .mkv (which does work) and then converting to .mp4 (with and without copy). I had hoped one of these might work ; but nothing has worked thus far.

    


    Has anyone else solved this problem ? Any help would be greatly appreciated.